Literacy Glossary - Thomas Fairchild | Community School

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Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Literacy Glossary
Term
Active Voice
Abbreviation
Accent
Acronym
Acrostic
Definition
A verb in the active voice has its usual pattern of subject and object – contrast
passive voice.
During the afternoon, the children will follow the nature trail and learn about
the trees, flowers and wildlife in this interesting habitat.
A word or a phrase which has been shortened, it can also be initial letters
pronounced separately.
E.g.
a) math – mathematics
b) Brit – British
c) KG – kilogramme
d) RAF – Royal Air Force
Features of pronunciation which varies according to the speaker’s regional and
social origin. All oral language, including standard English, is spoken with an
accent. The term accent refers to pronunciation only.
An acronym is an abbreviation which is made up of the initial letters of a
group of words, and is pronounced as a single word.
E.g.
laser (light amplification by the stimulated emission of radiation)
Aids (Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
RAM (Random Access Memory
Acronyms are to be contrasted with abbreviations in which the separate
letters are pronounced.
A poetic form which is organised by the initial letters of a key word, either at
the beginning of lines, or with lines arranged around them:
Whistling wildly
In a
Northern
Direction
Active and Passive
Blowing
Rain
Round
and round.
Many verbs can be active or passive. For example, bite:
The dog bit Ben. (active)
Ben was bitten by the dog. (passive)
In the active sentence, the subject (the dog) performs the action. In the
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
passive sentence, the subject (Ben) is on the receiving end of the action. The
two sentences give similar information, but there is a difference in focus. The
first is about what the dog did; the second is about what happened to Ben.
All passive forms are made up of the verb be + past participle:
Active: Somebody saw you.
We must find them.
I have repaired it.
Passive: You were seen.
They must be found.
It has been repaired.
In a passive sentence, the ‘doer’ (or agent) may be identified using by ...:
Ben was bitten by the dog.
But very often, in passive sentences, the agent is unknown or insignificant, and
therefore not identified:
The computer has been repaired.
Adjective
Adjectival Phrase
Adjectival Clause
Adverb
Passive forms are common in impersonal, formal styles. For example:
It was agreed that ... (compare We agreed that ...).
Application forms may be obtained from the address below.
A word that describes someone or something. It can:
• Pre-modify a noun e.g. big book
• be used on its own as a complement e.g. the book is big.
• intensified e.g. the very big book.
• appear as a comparative e.g. the bigger book.
• appear as a superlative e.g. the biggest book.
• be modified into adverbs by adding - ly e.g. sad → sadly, great → greatly.
But not old → oldly.
A group of words acting together as an adjective.
e.g.
The man with the tall white hat is the chef.
A group of words acting together as an adjective but containing a verb.
e.g.
The man who is wearing the tall white hat is the chef.
Adds meaning to a verb. They can:
• pre-modify a word, phrase or sentence e.g.
You sounded terribly anxious (adverb + adjective)
You spoke very anxiously (adverb + adverb)
I spoke to nearly everyone (adverb + pronoun)
We had quite a noisy party (adverb + noun phrase)
We thoroughly enjoyed our holiday (adverb + verb)
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Really, it was awful! (adverb + sentence)
Adverbials/
adverbial phrases
• there are 7 types of adverb:
How – slowly, happily, solemnly
Where – outside, upstairs, under
When – yesterday, afterwards
How often – regularly, yearly
Why – therefore, because
Degree – very, extremely
Negation – neither, nor
A group of words that function in the same way as a single adverb e.g.
He shouted in anger. (how)
The dog was in the garden. (where)
The parcel arrived a few days ago. (when)
Every Sunday the family went for a meal. (how often)
The meeting was cancelled because of the storm. (why)
An adverbial phrase is a group of words that functions in the same way as a
single adverb. For example: by car, to school, last week, three times a day, first
of all, of course:
They left yesterday. (adverb) She looked at me strangely. (adverb)
They left a few days ago. She looked at me in a strange way.
(adverbial phrase) (adverbial phrase)
Affix
Agreement (or
concord)
Similarly, an adverbial clause functions in the same way as an adverb. For
example:
It was raining yesterday. (adverb)
It was raining when we went out. (adverbial clause).
A morpheme which is not in itself a word, but is attached to a word. An affix
can be a prefix (intolerant, dislike) or a suffix (kindness, playing).
In some cases the form of a verb changes according to its subject (so the verb
and subject ‘agree’).
This happens with the verb be:
I am/he is/they are
I was/you were
and the third person singular (he/she/it) of the present tense:
I like/she likes
I don’t/he doesn’t
Note that singular collective nouns (eg team, family, government) can take a
singular or plural verb form.
E.g.
The team (= it) is playing well.
The team (= they) are playing well.
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
There are a few cases where a determiner must agree with a noun according
to whether it is singular or plural.
E.g.
this house these houses
much traffic many cars
The repetition of the same consonants (usually the initial sounds of words or
of stressed syllables) at the start of several words or syllables in sequence or in
Alliteration
close proximity to each other.
e.g. The snake
slithered up the slope towards it’s prey.
Alphabetical Order Putting words alphabetically means arranging the words in the order of the
alphabet by using the first letters of the words.
When the first letters are the same, you use the second letters, and if they are
the same use the third, and so on.
Ambiguity
E.g.
a) By the first letter: arch, baby, cat, dwarf, elephant
b) When the first letter is the same: abseil, adore, ailment, ant, artistic
c) When the first two letters are the same: pink, pioneer, pirouette, pitch,
pixie
A phrase or statement which has more than one possible interpretation. This
sometimes arises from unclear grammatical relationships. For example, in the
phrase: ‘police shot man with knife’, it is not specified whether the man had
the knife or the police used the knife to shoot the man. Both interpretations
are possible, although only one is logical. In poetry, ambiguity may extend
meanings beyond the literal.
The sentence: ‘Walking dogs can be fun’ has two possible interpretations: ‘it is
fun to take dogs for walks’ or ‘dogs which go walking are fun’.
Analogy
Ambiguity is often a source of humour. Ambiguity may be accidental or
deliberate.
Perception of similarity between two things; relating something known to
something new; in spelling, using known spellings to spell unknown words:
night-knight-right-sight-light-fright; in reading, using knowledge of words to
attempt previously unseen words.
Emphasis on analogy encourages learners to generalise existing knowledge to
new situations.
Anecdote
In their learning of grammar, pupils often apply affixes incorrectly by analogy:
goed, comed, mouses. Analogy may also be used in literature to draw a
parallel between two situations, for example using animal behaviour to draw
attention to human behaviour.
A brief written or spoken account of an amusing incident, often used to
illustrate a point.
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Antonyms
These are pairs of words which have opposite meanings to one another.
Apostrophe
E.g.
a) loud….quiet
b) hard….soft
c) dark….light
d) summer….winter
1) Use the apostrophe with contractions. The apostrophe is always placed at
the spot where the letter(s) has been removed.
e.g.
don't, isn't
You're right.
She's a great teacher.
2) Use the apostrophe to show possession. Place the apostrophe before the s
to show singular possession.
e.g.
one boy's hat
one woman's hat
Ms. Chang's house
NOTE: Although names ending in s or an s sound are not required to have the
second s added in possessive form, it is preferred.
Examples:
Mr. Jones's golf clubs
Texas's weather
Ms. Straus's daughter
Jose Sanchez's artwork
Dr. Hastings's appointment (name is Hastings)
Mrs. Lees's books (name is Lees)
Appendix
Article
Assonance
Asterisk (*)
Auxiliary verbs
A section added to a document which offers non-essential or illustrative
information.
A, an and the are articles. A (an before a vowel sound) is the indefinite article;
the is the definite article. Articles are a type of determiner.
The word is usually used to describe the repetition of vowel sounds in
neighbouring syllables (The consonants can differ: so 'deep sea' is an example
of assonance, whereas 'The queen will sweep past the deep crowds' is an
example of internal rhyme.)
An asterisk is a symbol used to refer the reader to footnotes below the text. It
can also be used to replace letters in taboo words.
These are verbs that are used together with other verbs.
E.g.
we are going
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Lucy has arrived
can you play
In these sentences, going, arrived and play are the main verbs. Are, has and
can are auxiliary verbs, and add extra meaning to the main verb.
The most common auxiliary verbs are be, have and do (all of which can also be
main verbs).
Be is used in continuous forms (be + -ing) and in passive forms:
We are going away. Was the car damaged?
Have is used in perfect verb forms:
Lucy has arrived. I haven’t finished.
Do is used to make questions and negatives in the simple present and past
tenses:
Do you know the answer? I didn’t see anybody.
More than one auxiliary verb can be used together. For example:
I have been waiting for ages. (have and been are auxiliary verbs)
The remaining auxiliary verbs are modal verbs, eg can, will.
Blend
Brackets
The process of combining phonemes into larger elements such as clusters,
syllables and words. Also refers to a combination of two or more phonemes,
particularly at the beginning and end of words, st, str, nt, pl,nd
These are used for enclosing information in a text.
Capital Letters and
Full Stops
E.g. The cat (which was ginger) prowled the gardens at night.
When a sentence reaches a natural end, there needs to be a full stop and
every sentence after that must begin with a capital letter.
Chronological
Writing
Clause
E.g.
Rachel’s cat was happy. This was because he had caught a mouse.
Writing organised in terms of sequences of events.
A group of words that expresses an event or situation, forming part of a
sentence or a whole (simple) sentence. It contains a subject (noun) and verb
e.g.
Hilary yawned.
Note how a clause differs from a phrase:
a big dog (a phrase - this refers to ‘a big dog’ but doesn’t say what the dog did
or what happened to it)
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
A big dog chased me (a clause - the dog did something)
A sentence is made up of one or more clauses:
It was raining (one clause)
It was raining and we were cold. (two main clauses joined by and)
It was raining when we went out. (main clause containing a subordinate clause
- the subordinate clause is underlined)
A main clause is complete on its own and can form a complete sentence (eg It
was raining.). A subordinate clause (when we went out) is part of the main
clause and cannot exist on its own. In the following examples, the subordinate
clauses are underlined:
You’ll hurt yourself if you’re not careful.
Although it was cold, the weather was pleasant enough.
Where are the biscuits (that) I bought this morning?
John, who was very angry, began shouting.
What you said was not true.
Although most clauses require a subject and verb, some subordinate clauses
do not. In many such cases, the verb be can be understood.
Adverbial clauses
Cliché
E.g.
The weather, although rather cold, was pleasant enough.
(= although it was rather cold)
When in Rome, do as the Romans do.
(= when you are in Rome)
Glad to be home, George sat down in his favourite armchair.
(= he was glad to be home)
A group of words containing a verb that function in the same way as a single
adverb
There are 8 types of adverbial clauses
When
Where
Why
For what purpose
With what result
Under what conditions/circumstances
Granting certain circumstances
Comparison
The food is not as good as it used to be. (comparison)
He went to the shop to buy a newspaper. (for what purpose)
I got up late so I missed the postman. (with what result )
If you don’t hurry up you will be late.(under what circumstances)
Though the weather was bad they had a good day out. (granting certain
circumstances)
An over-used phrase or opinion: sick as a parrot; her eyes shone like stars; too
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Cloze
Cohesion
Cohesive Device
Colon (:)
Colloquialisms
many cooks spoil the broth. May be idiomatic.
An exercise in which certain words are deleted from a text and a gap left. The
learner’s task is to supply the missing words. The teacher chooses which
words to omit, depending on the learning task. Words can be deleted in a
specific way, eg adjectives, conjunctions, or randomly (every nth word). Cloze
procedure can be used to measure readability.
Use of connectives and adverbials which help to give the sentences/paragraph
a united style and link from one paragraph to the next.
Cohesive devices are words that make clear how a text’s parts are related to
one another. Some words such as determiners and pronouns are especially
important for building cohesion because they refer back to earlier words.
Other words such as prepositions, conjunctions and adverbs (connectives)
make relations clear.
E.g.
A visit has been arranged for the Year 6 class, to Mountain Peaks Field Study
Centre, on July 18th, leaving school at 9.30am. This is an overnight visit. ... The
centre has extensive grounds in which a nature trail has been designed. During
the afternoon, the children will follow the nature trail.
A punctuation mark that is used to separate the text from another piece of
information, usually before a list.
E.g.
There are some things you should always avoid: getting run over by a car, lions
and not trying hard for your 11+ exams!
These are expressions which are used in everyday conversation, but can also
be used when writing speech.





Comma (,)
Lion-hearted – somebody who has much courage
Heavy-eyed – somebody who is sleepy
Down in the mouth – when somebody is feeling sad, or is low in spirit
Pull up short – stop suddenly
Make both ends meet – to be able to manage financially
A comma is a punctuation mark used to help the reader by separating parts of
a sentence. It sometimes corresponds to a pause in speech.
In particular we use commas:
to separate items in a list (but not usually before and):
My favourite sports are football, tennis, swimming and gymnastics.
I got home, had a bath and went to bed.
to mark off extra information:
Jill, my boss, is 28 years old.
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
after a subordinate clause which begins a sentence:
Although it was cold, we didn’t wear our coats.
Comma Splice
Complement
Complex sentence
with many connecting adverbs (eg however, on the other hand, anyway, for
example):
Anyway, in the end I decided not to go.
Where a comma is used incorrectly in place of a full stop. e.g.
The man walked slowly to the station, he was early for the train Should read
– The man walked slowly to the station. He was early for the train.
Or
The main walked slowly to the station because he was early for the train.
Or
The man walked slowly to the station; he was early for the train.
A verb’s complement (or ‘predicative complement’) ‘completes’ the verb’s
meaning by adding more information about the verb’s subject (or, in some
cases, its object). Unlike the verb’s object, its complement may be an
adjective. The verb be normally has a complement.
E.g.
This is an overnight visit.
[You make me happy.]
It was Wednesday.
... she was in charge.
A sentence with a main clause and at least one subordinate clause.
When it began to rain, the children came in from the playground
subordinate clause
main clause
The children went out at break time, even though it was very cold.
main clause
Compound
Sentence
Compound Word
subordinate clause
The main clause is the only one that can stand alone.
Two or more main clauses joined by a conjunction or suitable punctuation.
e.g.
I like coffee and I like tea.
Jack fell down, hurt his leg and was yelling.
A word made up of two other words
rain + bow = rainbow
fire + man = fireman
some + where = somewhere
how + ever = however
Comprehension
The level of understanding of a text.
literal
The reader has access to the surface details of the text, and can recall details
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
which have been directly related.
inferential
The reader can read meanings which are not directly explained. For example,
the reader would be able to make inferences about the time of year from
information given about temperature, weather, etc and from characters’
behaviour and dialogue.
evaluative
The reader can offer an opinion on the effectiveness of the text for its
purpose.
Conditional
Conjunction
A sentence in which one thing depends on another. They often contain the
conjunction if.
e.g.
I’ll help you if I can
If the weather is good, we will go to the beach
What would you do if you were in my position?
A word that links clauses within a sentence.
There are two types of conjunctions:
Coordinating conjunctions join main clauses (and, or, but, so)
e.g.
It was raining but it wasn’t cold.
I could not find my homework so I missed the bus and I was late for school.
Connective
Subordinating conjunctions go at the beginning of a subordinate clause.
(when, while, before, after, since, until, if, because, although, that)
e.g.
We won’t go out if the weather is bad
Although we’d had plenty to eat, we were still hungry.
(Also see connective)
Connectives can be conjunctions.
A word or phrase that links clauses or sentences. There are different types of
connectives with different functions:
• Addition also, furthermore, moreover
• Opposition however, nevertheless, on the other hand, but, instead, in
contrast, looking at it another way
• Reinforcing besides, anyway, after all
• Explaining for example, in other words • Listing first of all, secondly, finally
Listing first(ly), first of all, finally
• Indicating result therefore, consequently, as a result, thanks to this, because
of this
• Time
Subsequent just then, next, in due course, in the end, after that, later,
finally, eventually
Prior at first, before, in the beginning, until then, up to that time
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Concurrent in the meantime, simultaneously, concurrently meanwhile
Consonant
Content word
Also known as
Lexical words
Couplet
Dash (—)
Decode
Determiner
(See Grammar for Writing page 130)
A consonant is a speech sound which obstructs the flow of air through the
vocal tract; for example, the flow of air is obstructed by the lips in p and by the
tongue in l. The term also refers to those letters of the alphabet whose typical
value is to represent such sounds, namely all except a,e,i,o,u. The letter y can
represent a consonant sound (yes) or a vowel sound (happy).
Words that carry specific information and/or topic words e.g.
astronaut, cosmonaut, telescope, planet, orbit
A rhymed pair of lines, which are usually of the same length.
A dash is a punctuation mark used especially in informal writing (such as
letters to friends, postcards or notes).
Dashes may be used to replace other punctuation marks (colons, semi-colons,
commas) or brackets:
It was a great day out — everybody enjoyed it.
Literally, this means to convert a message written/spoken in code into
language which is easily understood. In reading this refers to children’s ability
to read words – to translate the visual code of the letters into a word.
Determiners include many of the most frequent English words, eg the, a, my,
this. Determiners are used with nouns (this book, my best friend, a new car)
and they limit (ie determine) the reference of the noun in some way.
Determiners include:
articles
demonstratives
a/an, the
this/that, these/those
possessives
my/your/his/her/its/our/their
quantifiers
some, any, no, many, much, few, little, both, all, either,
neither, each, every, enough
numbers
three, fifty, three thousand etc
some question
words
which (which car?), what (what size?), whose (whose
coat?)
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
When these words are used as determiners, they are followed by a noun
(though not necessarily immediately):
this book is yours
some new houses
which colour do you prefer?
Many determiners can also be used as pronouns. These include the
demonstratives, question words, numbers and most of the quantifiers. When
used as pronouns, these words are not followed by a noun - their reference
includes the noun:
this is yours (= this book, this money, etc)
I've got some
which do you prefer?
Dialect
A dialect is a variety of a language used in a particular area and which is
distinguished by certain features of grammar or vocabulary. Examples of such
features in some English dialects are:
non-standard subject + verb patterns, eg I knows, you was, he like
past tense forms, eg I done, I seen
various individual words and expressions, eg owt/nowt for anything/nothing
Digraph
Diminutive
Direct Speech and
Indirect Speech
see also double negative, standard English
Two letters representing one phoneme: bath; train; ch/ur/ch.
A term which implies smallness. This may reflect actual physical lack of
stature; alternatively, it may be used as a term of endearment. The word may
be a recognised word, eg Tiny Tim, Little Dorrit, or may be created by the
addition of a suffix to a name or noun: lambkin, starlet and kitchenette.
There are two ways of reporting what somebody says, direct speech and
indirect speech.
In direct speech, we use the speaker’s original words (as in a speech bubble).
In text, speech marks (‘…’ or “…”—
also called inverted commas or quotes) mark the beginning and end of direct
speech:
Helen said, ‘I’m going home’.
‘What do you want?’ I asked.
In indirect (or reported) speech, we report what was said but do not use the
exact words of the original speaker.
Typically we change pronouns and verb tenses, and speech marks are not
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Doubles
used:
Helen said (that) she was going home.
I asked them what they wanted.
Either repeating words or putting two words together:
1) By repeating a word: again and again, by and by, over and over, round and
round
2) By repeating a meaning: beck and call, part and parcel, safe and sound
3) By using alliteration: fast and furious, rough and ready, one and only
4) By using opposites: thick and thin, on and off, in and out, high and low
5) By using words which sound similar: out and about, high and dry, wear and
tear
6) By using related words: body and soul, lock and key, hammer and tongs
7) Other examples: hard and fast, rough and tumble, touch and go, over and
above
Elision (or ellipsis) is the omission of a word or phrase which is expected and
predictable.
Elision
Ellipsis
E.g.
She waved to her mother and [she] watched her as she disappeared in the fog
at the bottom of the street. She did it because she wanted to [do it].
Ellipsis is the omission of words in order to avoid repetition. For example:
I don’t think it will rain but it might. (= it might rain)
‘Where were you born?’ ‘Bradford.’ (= I was born in Bradford)
An ellipsis is also the term used for three dots (…) which show that something
has been omitted or is incomplete.
Etymology
A word’s etymology is its history: its origins in earlier forms of English or other
languages, and how its form and meaning have changed.
E.g.
The word school was borrowed from a Greek word σχολή (skhole) meaning ‘leisure’.
Exclamation
An exclamation is an utterance expressing emotion (joy, wonder, anger,
surprise, etc) and is usually followed in writing by an exclamation mark (!).
Exclamations can be interjections:
Oh dear!
Good grief!
Ow!
Some exclamations begin with what or how:
What a beautiful day!
How stupid (he is)!
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
What a quiet little girl.
Exclamation Mark
(!)
Exclamations like these are a special type of sentence (‘exclamative’) and may
have no verb.
An exclamation mark is used at the end of a sentence (which may be
exclamative, imperative or declarative) or an interjection to indicate strong
emotion:
What a pity!
Get out!
It’s a goal!
Oh dear!
Expanded noun
phrase
Expanded verb
phrase
Finite Verb
Figurative
Language
See also exclamation, sentence
A group of words in a sentence that function like a noun. They expand the
noun and give the information in a more economical way e.g.
The small black cat with the yellow eyes
The athletic footballer in the blue strip
A soaring, impressive tree spread its massive limbs into the sky
A group of words that forms a verb. e.g.
I am going to the shops
I have been to the cinema
He might win the race
A finite verb is limited (‘finite’) in terms of both its tense and its subject. Finite
verbs are important because a written sentence normally needs at least one
clause that contains a finite verb, and a finite verb must have an explicit
subject.
E.g.
Mum said she wasn’t going to be long. The centre has extensive grounds in
which a nature trail has been designed.
Use of metaphor or simile to create a particular impression or mood.
A writer may develop an idea of a character's military approach to life by using
phrases and words which are linked with the army,
First Person
Formulaic phrases
such as he was something of a loose cannon (metaphor); he rifled through the
papers; his arm shot out; he marched into the room; he paraded his
knowledge. To link a character with a bird, she/he may use: he flew down the
stairs; they twittered to each other; he perched on his chair; his feathers were
definitely ruffled.
Narrative told by the point of view of the main character involved in the action
by using ‘I’ and ‘we’.
Phrases that are genre specific e.g. traditional tales, science fiction
Once upon a time
They all lived happily ever after.
In a far off galaxy
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Fronted
Future Tense
Genre
Grammar
Grammatical
boundary
Grammatical
function
A word that would normally follow the verb may be ‘fronted’ to the start of
the clause; for instance, a fronted adverbial is an adverbial which has been put
at the front of the clause.
E.g.
During the afternoon, the children will follow the nature trail
English has no ‘future tense’ comparable with its present and past tenses.
Reference to future time can be marked in a number of different ways, all of
which include a present-tense verb.
E.g.
It will leave tomorrow. It leaves tomorrow. It may leave tomorrow. It is going
to leave tomorrow.
Text types or styles e.g. instructions, play scripts, traditional tale, flash back,
non-chronological report, description.
The conventions which govern the relationships between words in any
language. Includes the study of word order and changes in words: use of
inflections, etc. Study of grammar is important, as it enhances both reading
and writing skills; it supports effective communication.
The edge of a grammatical unit (a sentence, clause or phrase) which, in
writing, may be indicated by a punctuation mark such as a comma, full stop,
colon, semi-colon or dash.
The syntactic (grammatical) relationships between words/the job that each
word does in a sentence, phrase or clause.
e.g. He gave the dog a massive bone this morning
pronoun
Grapheme
Guided reading
verb
definite
article
noun
indef
article
adjective
noun
adverbial
phrase
Written representation of a sound; may consist of one or more letters; for
example the phoneme s can be represented by the graphemes s, se, c, sc and
ce as in sun, mouse, city, science.
A classroom activity in which pupils are taught in groups according to reading
ability. The teacher works with each group on a text carefully selected to offer
an appropriate level of challenge to the group. Usefully thought of as a 'mini
lesson'. Challenge may be in terms of reading cues and strategies, language
and vocabulary, or sophisticated aspects of grammar, inference, skimming and
scanning.
Guided reading sessions have a similar format:
a. the teacher introduces the text, and sets the purpose for reading, for
example reminding pupils of strategies and cues which will be useful,
or asking them to gather particular information;
b. pupils read independently, solving problems as they read through the
text. More fluent readers will read silently. The teacher is available to
offer help when it is needed. S/he then guides pupils to appropriate
cues, for example use of syntax, picture cues, initial letter;
c. the teacher discusses the text with the pupils, drawing attention to
successful strategies and focusing on comprehension, referring back to
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
the initial focus.
Guided writing
Homograph
Homonym
Homophone
Hyphen (-)
A classroom activity in which pupils are grouped by writing ability. The
teachers works with each group on a task carefully selected to offer an
appropriate level of challenge to the group. Usefully thought of as a 'mini
lesson'. Challenge may be in terms of spelling, letter formation, simple
punctuation, language and vocabulary, or sophisticated aspects of generic
structure, planning and editing, use of imagery and so on.
Words which have the same spelling as another, but different meaning: the
calf was eating/my calf was aching; the North Pole/totem pole/he is a Pole.
Pronunciation may be different: a lead pencil/the dog's lead; furniture
polish/Polish people. A homonym.
Words which have the same spelling or pronunciation as another, but
different meaning or origin. May be a homograph or homophone.
Words that sound the same but are spelt differently and have different
meanings e.g.
there/their/they’re
where/wear
new/knew
hair/hare
allowed/aloud
A hyphen is sometimes used to join the two parts of a compound noun, as in
golf-ball and proof-read. But it is much more usual for such compounds to be
written as single words (eg football, headache, bedroom) or as separate words
without a hyphen (golf ball, stomach ache, dining room, city centre).
However, hyphens are used in the following cases:
a). in compound adjectives and longer phrases used as modifiers before
nouns:
a foul-smelling substance
a well-known painter
a German-English dictionary
a one-in-a-million chance
a state-of-the-art computer
a ten-year-old girl
b). in many compound nouns where the second part is a short word like in, off,
up or by:
a break-in
a write-off
a mix-up
a passer-by
c). in many words beginning with the prefixes co-, non- and ex-:
co-operate
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
non-existent
ex-husband
Idiom
Indirect speech
Hyphens are also used to divide words at the end of a line of print.
A word construction or verbal expression closely associated with a given
language.
e.g. a piece of cake = something is easily done
There are two ways of reporting what somebody says, direct speech and
indirect speech.
In direct speech, we use the speaker's original words (as in a speech bubble).
In text, speech marks ('…' or "…" – also called inverted commas or quotes)
mark the beginning and end of direct speech:
Helen said, 'I'm going home'.
'What do you want?' I asked.
In indirect (or reported) speech, we report what was said but do not use the
exact words of the original speaker. Typically we change pronouns and verb
tenses, and speech marks are not used:
Infinitive
Helen said (that) she was going home.
I asked them what they wanted.
The infinitive is the base form of the verb without any additional endings. For
example, play is an infinitive form (as opposed to playing, played or plays).
The infinitive is used with many auxiliary verbs:
I will play
he should play
do you play?
The infinitive is often used with to (to play, to eat etc):
I ought to play
I want to play
I'm going to play
it would be nice to play
Inflection
The simple present tense (I play, they play etc) has the same form as the
infinitive, except for the third person singular (he/she/it plays).
Inflection is a change to the ending of a word to indicate tense, number or
other grammatical features.
Example: walk – walks/walked/walking
shoe – shoes
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Imagery
old - older/oldest
An array of images given by the text. Use of language to create a vivid sensory
image - often visual. May include:
vocabulary choice of synonym, for example sprinted/ran/raced, selection of
adjectives and adverbs
simile he ran like the wind
metaphor his feet had wings
Imperative verb
Infinitive
see figurative language
Bossy verb e.g. go, cut, run
The infinitive is the base form of the verb without any additional endings. For
example, play is an infinitive form (as opposed to playing, played or plays).
The infinitive is used with many auxiliary verbs:
I will play
he should play
do you play?
The infinitive is often used with to (to play, to eat etc):
I ought to play
I want to play
I’m going to play
it would be nice to play
Inflected endings
Interjection
Internal Rhyme
Jargon
Letter string
Lexical
Logogram
The simple present tense (I play, they play etc) has the same form as the
infinitive, except for the third person singular (he/she/it plays).
Words where the ending has been changed to indicate tense, number etc. e.g.
Walk – walks, walked, walking was walking
Funny – funnier, funniest
An interjection is a word like Ouch!, Oh! or Damn! expressing an emotion such
as pain, surprise, anger, etc. An interjection is followed by an exclamation
mark (!).
Rhyme that occurs within a single line of Verse.
e.g. Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary.
Language used by a particular profession or interest group. May include
vocabulary unfamiliar to those outside the group, sometimes deliberately.
a group of letters which together represent a phoneme or morpheme
Relating to the individual words that make up the vocabulary of a language e.g
stand, standing, love, loves, loving, loved
a symbol or character which represents a morpheme or word. A logographic
system contrasts with an alphabetic-phonetic system, such as English, in which
symbols relate to sounds rather than meaning. There are a number of
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Metaphor
Mnemonic
Modal verb
Modify
Morphemes
logograms which would be instantly recognisable to those using alphabetic
systems, for example £, &, %.
To compare something as being something else.
e.g. The waves roared.
a device to aid memory, for instance to learn particular spelling patterns or
spellings: I Go Home Tonight; There is a rat in separate.
The modal verbs are:
• can/could
• will/would
• shall/should
• may/might
• must/ought
They are also called auxiliary verbs and are used to help the main verb.
e.g.
I could go to the beach this afternoon
You must finish your homework before bed
If one word modifies another, the modifying word stands as near as possible
to the modified word and makes the latter’s meaning more specific.
E.g.
In class teacher, teacher is modified by class so it means ‘class teacher’ (a kind
of teacher).
The smallest unit of meaning in a word. Suffixes and prefixes are also
morphemes.
1 morpheme
2 morphemes
e.g. house → houses
one
more than one
There may be more than one morpheme in a word (multiple morphemes)
3 morphemes
e.g. Unhelpful
Un → help → ful
not
Morphology
Nominalisation for
succinctness
Noun
root word
full of
A word’s morphology is its internal make-up defined in terms of a root word,
with changes such as the addition of prefixes or suffixes.
E.g.
dogs has the morphological make-up: dog + s.
Nominalisation = abstract nouns derived from verbs. e.g.
discover → discovery; move → movement; decide → decision
Changes the focus of the sentence from the agent to the action
e.g.
They decided to close the school. A decision was made to close the school.
Using an abstract noun removes unnecessary words from a sentence
(succinctness).
A word that denotes somebody or something. e.g.
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
table, sister, money
Proper nouns are for names of people, places and things and start with a
capital letter e.g.
Kent, November, Emma
Object
Onomatopoeia
Paragraph
Collective nouns refer to a group e.g.
herd of cows, the clergy, the jury, the class
(Also see expanded noun phrase)
A verb’s object is normally a noun or pronoun which is found immediately
after the verb, and which we expect to find there. Unlike complements,
objects can be turned into the subject of a passive verb, and cannot be
adjectives.
E.g.
They designed a nature trail.
(Compare: A nature trail was designed)
Not: They designed pretty.
The use of words or sounds which appear to resemble the sounds which they
describe e.g. 'snap, crackle, pop.'
A section of a piece of writing. A new paragraph marks a change of focus, a
change of time, a change of place or a change of speaker in a passage of
dialogue.
A new paragraph begins on a new line, usually with a one-line gap separating
it from the previous paragraph. Some writers also indent the first line of a new
paragraph.
Parenthesis
Paragraphing helps writers to organise their thoughts, and helps readers to
follow the story line, argument or dialogue.
A parenthesis is a word or phrase inserted into a sentence to explain or
elaborate. It may be placed in brackets or between dashes or commas:
Sam and Emma (his oldest children) are coming to visit him next weekend.
Margaret is generally happy – she sings in the mornings! – but responsibility
weighs her down.
Sarah is, I believe, our best student.
Participle
The term parentheses can also refer to the brackets themselves.
Verbs have a present participle and a past participle.
present participle
The present participle ends in -ing (working, reading, going etc). Although it is
called 'present', it is used in all continuous forms: she is going, she was going,
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
she will be going, she would have been going, etc.
The -ing ending is also used for a verb functioning as a noun. For example: I
enjoy reading, Reading is important. ('Reading' is used as a noun in these
examples.) This -ing form is sometimes called a verbal noun or a gerund.
past participle
The past participle often ends in -ed (worked, played) but many common verbs
are irregular and have other endings, eg -t (kept), -n (flown), and -en (stolen).
Past participles are used:
a. after have to make perfect forms: I've worked, he has fallen, we should have
gone
b. after be (is/was etc) to make passive forms: I was asked, they are kept, it
has been stolen
Here too, the name is misleading, because passive forms need not refer to the
past: A toast will be drunk.
Participles (present and past) are sometimes used as adjectives: the falling
leaves, stolen goods. They can also be used to introduce subordinate clauses,
for example:
Passive Voice
Past Tense
Perfect
Being a student, Tom doesn't have much money.
Written in 1923, the book has been translated into twenty-five languages.
A passive verb (a verb ‘in the passive voice’ – contrast ‘active voice’) normally
has a suffix ed, follows the verb be, and has its normal (‘active’) object and
subject reversed so that the active object is used as the passive subject, and
the active subject appears as an optional by phrase. A verb is not ‘passive’ just
because it has a ‘passive’ meaning – it must be the passive version of an active
verb.
E.g.
A visit was arranged by the school.
A visit was arranged.
(Compare the active: The school arranged a visit.)
A past-tense verb (‘a verb in the past tense’) normally has a suffix ed, names
an event or state in the past and is a finite verb. Some verbs have irregular
morphology (e.g. was, came) Past tense can also have other meanings.
E.g
She waved to her mother and watched her as she disappeared in the fog at
the bottom of the street. I knew that today was Sunday. If he understood you,
he would trust you.
The perfect form of a verb generally calls attention to the consequences of a
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
prior situation. It is formed by taking the past participle of the verb (e.g.
shown, taken, helped) and adding the verb have before it (e.g. she has helped).
It can also be combined with the continuous (e.g. he has been reading).
E.g.
She has recorded some popular songs for us to listen to. I had eaten lunch by
the time you came to visit yesterday. Tariq will have been doing his homework
all day by the time he finishes!
Personification
The give an inanimate object human attributes e.g. the sun stretched its arms
out towards the people below.
Personal Pronouns A noun is another name for a place or thing, for example: a chair, Rita,
telephone Big Ben.
We use personal pronouns to replace nouns which are people or things.
Personal pronouns for people: I, me, my, you, yours, he, him, his, she, her,
hers, we, us, ours, they, them, theirs
Personal pronouns for things: it, they, them
These personal pronouns are useful when writing as it means you can use
them to talk about things in more detail without repeating words you have
already used.
When Sally wants a cup of tea, Sally puts the kettle on.
To make the sentence sound better, it should really be written as
When Sally wants a cup of tea, she puts the kettle on.
The word ‘she’ has replaced the word ‘Sally’ in the sentence, making it more
interesting to read.
Personal pronouns can be divided into groups:
Subject Pronouns: the ‘who’ or ‘what’ the sentence is about.
I, you, he, she, it, we, they
Eg: I (subject) ate the cake
Object Pronouns: the ‘who’ or ‘what’ the verb was directed at
Me, you, him, her, it, us them
Eg: the ball hit me (object)
In the sentence Sally put the kettle on ‘Sally’ is the subject and is doing the
action (putting on) ‘the kettle’ is the object, or the thing the action is done to –
it is the thing which she puts on.
You could repeat this sentence by saying she put it on.
Possessive pronouns show us that something belongs to someone:
This pencil is yours your pencil
The cat sat on my
mine
Common mistakes:
 When that is used for who: ‘It was her, not me that spilt it’ (wrong)
 Using me instead of I: ‘It’s you and me who lose’ (wrong)
 Thinking ‘everyone’ is a plural: ‘Everyone must pay their fair share’ (wrong)
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Phoneme
Phonetically
plausible spelling
of unstressed
syllables
Phonological
awareness
Phrase
A phoneme is the smallest contrastive unit of sound in a word. There are
approximately 44 phonemes in English (the number varies depending on the
accent). A phoneme may have variant pronunciations in different positions;
for example, the first and last sounds in the word 'little' are variants of the
phoneme /l/. A phoneme may be represented by one, two, three or four
letters. The following words end in the same phoneme (with the
corresponding letters underlined):
to
shoe
through
Incorrect but plausible spelling of words containing a hard to hear syllable. e.g.
Wensday → Wednesday
amblance → ambulance
usully → usually
Awareness of sounds within words - demonstrated for example in the ability
to generate rhyme and alliteration, and in segmenting and blending
component sounds.
As one unit. So dog is a word, but the dog, a big dog over there, are all
phrases. Strictly speaking, a phrase can also consist of just one word. For
example, in the sentence Dogs are nice, ‘dogs’ and ‘nice’ are both one-word
phrases
A phrase can function as a noun, an adjective or an adverb:
A noun phrase
a big dog, my last holiday
An adjectival phrase
(she’s not) as old as you, (I’m) really hungry
An adverbial phrase
(they left) five minutes ago, (she walks) very slowly
I f a phrase begins with a preposition (like in a hurry, along the lane), it can be
called a prepositional phrase. A prepositional phrase can be adjectival or
adverbial in meaning:
Adjectival
Plural
(I’m) in a hurry, (the man) with long hair
Adverbial
(they left) on Tuesday, (she lives) along the lane
A plural noun normally has a suffix s and means more than one example of the
noun’s basic meaning. There are a few nouns with irregular morphology (e.g.
mice, formulae) or irregular meanings.
E.g.
The children will follow the nature trail and learn about the trees, flowers and
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Prefix
Preposition
wildlife.
The centre has extensive grounds.
(but not: ... a ground)
A morpheme added to the start of a root word to change its meaning.
e.g.
unhelpful; disappear
submarine; misunderstand
A word that indicates time, position, possession usually followed by a noun or
noun phrase e.g.
over, under, with, during, at
We go home at midnight.
They jumped over the fence.
He came with me.
E.g.
about
above
across
after
against
along
amid
before
into
except
of
among
for
around
from
at
in
underneath
until
up
unto
near
with
until
within
unto
without
Sometimes it is difficult to know which the correct preposition to use is. The
following list should help (note all the differences when referring to an object or a
person):
According to
Agree to (something)
Agree with
(somebody)
Aim at
Angry at (something)
Angry with
(somebody)
Ashamed of
Attack on
Blame for
Change
for(something)
Change with
(somebody)
Comment on
Compared with
Complain of
Differ from (opinion)
Differ with (person)
Disagree with
Opposite to
Part from (something)
Part with (somebody)
Disappointed
in(something)
Disappointed with
(somebody)
Disgusted at (something)
Prevail on
Disgusted with
(somebody)
Dislike for
Divide among (many)
Divide between (two)
Recoil from
Equal to
Suffer from
Filled with
Full of
Good for
Tired of (something)
Tired with (action)
Thirst for
Protest against
Pursuit of
Regard for
Rely on
Similar to
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Present Tense
Possessive
Pronoun
Compared with
Complain of
Guilty of
Indignant at (something)
Confer with
Conscious of
Indignant with
(somebody)
Inspired by
Defiance of
Interfere with
Despair of
Invasion of
Die of
Meddle with
Vexed at (something)
Vexed
with(somebody)
Victim of
Wait for (person,
thing)
Wait upon
(somebody)
Write about
(something)
Write to (somebody)
A present-tense verb (‘a verb in the present tense’) normally names a
situation that is true now. It normally has either no suffix or –s (depending on
the subject), and is a finite verb.
E.g.
The centre has extensive grounds.
He can swim.
When he arrives, he will unpack his bag.
Your father tells me that you’re not happy.
A possessive is normally either a noun followed by an apostrophe and –s, or a
possessive pronoun, and names the owner (‘possessor’) of the noun that it
modifies. A possessive acts as a determiner, and must be replaced by an
ordinary determiner if it is turned into an of phrase.
E.g.
Tariq’s book (the book of Tariq, i.e. that Tariq owns)
somebody else’s book (the book of somebody else)
There are several kinds of pronoun which often replace a noun or noun phrase
to avoid repetition.
Personal pronouns: I, me, he, him, she, her, we, us, they, them, it
Possessive pronouns: mine, yours, hers, ours, theirs, its
Reflexive pronouns: myself, herself, themselves …
Indefinite pronouns: someone, anything, nobody, everything
Interrogative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, what
Relative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, that
Proverb
NB: Determiners can also be used as pronouns.
A short and often memorable saying for an everyday truth or advice.
E.g.
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Punctuation
Question Mark (?)
Quotation
Relative
Clause
Rhetorical
Expression
Rhyme
Rhythm
Root Word
 The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
 Absence makes the heart grow fonder
 Birds of a feather flock together
 Don’t carry all your eggs in one basket
 Every cloud has a silver lining
 From little acorns mighty oak trees grow
 He laughs best who laughs last
 Look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves
 None so deaf as those who will not hear
 Once bitten, twice shy
 When the cat’s away, the mice will play
Punctuation includes any conventional features of written presentation other
than spelling and general layout: the standard punctuation marks (. , ; : ? ! - -- (
) “ ‘ ), and also word-spaces, capital letters, apostrophes, paragraph breaks
and bullet points. One of the roles of punctuation is to indicate sentence
boundaries.
E.g.
“I’m going out, Usha, and I won’t be long,” Mum said.
A question mark is used at the end of an interrogative sentence (eg Who was
that?) or one whose function is a question (eg You’re leaving already?)
A passage or information that is given in reference.
E.g.
He asked, “Who’s afraid of the big, bad wolf?”
A relative clause is a subordinate clause that modifies a noun by including it in
the clause; for instance, cake that he had left yesterday means ‘cake like this:
she had left it yesterday’.
E.g.
The centre has extensive grounds in which a nature trail has been designed.
She got herself a cake that she had bought yesterday.
An utterance in which the meaning intended by the speaker/writer is an
expression different from that which might be inferred by a listener who is
unaware of the conventions of the language; for example Do you know his
name? is a question which seems to require a yes/no response; in fact, the
speaker is asking What is his name? Rhetorical expressions are often questions
disguising imperatives: Would you like to get out your English books? usually
means Get out your English books.
When two or more words or phrases contain an identical or similar vowelsound, and the consonant-sounds that follow are identical or similar e.g. red
and dead.
A term designating the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in verse or
prose.
A root word is a word which does not contain any smaller root words or
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
prefixes or suffixes.
Segment
Sentence
E.g.
play, compute, as in: So she played on the computer.
To break a word or part of a word down into its component phonemes, for
example: c-a-t; ch-a-t; ch-ar-t; g-r-ou-n-d; s-k-i-n.
A sequence of words which makes complete sense, containing subject, object
and main verb, and concluded by a full-stop'.
A sentence can be simple, compound or complex.
A simple sentence consists of one clause:
It was late.
A compound sentence has two or more clauses joined by and, or, but or so.
The clauses are of equal weight (they are both main clauses):
It was late but I wasn't tired.
A complex sentence consists of a main clause which itself includes one or
more subordinate clauses:
Although it was late, I wasn't tired. (subordinate clause beginning with
although underlined)
Simple sentences can also be grouped as follows according to their structure:
declarative (for statements, suggestions, etc):
The class yelled in triumph. Maybe we could eat afterwards.
interrogative (for questions, requests, etc):
Is your sister here? Could you show me how?
imperative (for commands, instructions, etc):
Hold this! Take the second left.
exclamative (for exclamations):
How peaceful she looks. What a pity!
In writing, we mark sentences by using a capital letter at the beginning, and a
full stop (or question mark or exclamation mark) at the end.
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
Semi-colon (;)
A semi-colon can be used to separate two main clauses in a sentence:
I liked the book; it was a pleasure to read.
This could also be written as two separate sentences:
I liked the book. It was a pleasure to read.
However, where the two clauses are closely related in meaning (as in the
above example), a writer may prefer to use a semi-colon rather than two
separate sentences.
Semi-colons can also be used to separate items in a list if these items consist
of longer phrases. For example:
I need large, juicy tomatoes; half a pound of unsalted butter; a kilo of fresh
pasta, preferably tagliatelle; and a jar of black olives.
shared writing
Simile
Singular and Plural
In a simple list, commas are used
A classroom process where the teacher models the writing process for
children: free from the physical difficulties of writing, children can observe,
and subsequently be involved in, planning, composition, redrafting, editing
and publishing through the medium of the teacher. Shared writing is
interactive in nature and is appropriate for teaching all forms and genres.
A comparison between two objects or ideas which is introduced by 'like' or 'as'
e.g. He was as strong as an ox!
Singular forms are used to refer to one thing, person etc. For example: tree,
student, party.
Many nouns (countable nouns) can be singular (only one) or plural (more than
one). The plural is usually marked by the ending -s: trees, students, parties.
Some plural forms are irregular. For example: children, teeth, mice.
Other nouns (mass nouns) do not normally occur in the plural. For example:
butter, cotton, electricity, money, happiness.
Verbs, pronouns, and determiners sometimes have different singular and
plural forms:
He was late They were late
Where is the key? Have you seen it? Where are the keys? Have you seen them?
Do you like this hat? Do you like these shoes?
Note that they/them/their (plural words) are sometimes used to refer back to
singular words that don’t designate a specific person, such as anyone or
somebody. In such cases, they usually means ‘he or she’:
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Slang
Standard English
If anyone wants to ask a question, they can ask me later. (= he or she can ask
me)
Did everybody do their homework?
Work with a partner. Ask them their name.
Words and phrases which are used in informal context, often linked with
certain regions or used by people identifying with particular groups. May
differentiate that group from others.
Standard English is the variety of English used in public communication,
particularly in writing. It is the form taught in schools and used by educated
speakers. It is not limited to a particular region and can be spoken with any
accent.
There are differences in vocabulary and grammar between standard English
and other varieties. For example, we were robbed and look at those trees are
standard English; we was robbed and look at them trees are non-standard.
To communicate effectively in a range of situations - written and oral - it is
necessary to be able to use standard English, and to recognise when it is
appropriate to use it in preference to any other variety.
Note that standard British English is not the only standard variety; other
English-speaking countries, such as the United States and Australia, have their
own standard forms.
Stanza
Stress
Subject
Subjunctive
see also agreement, dialect, double negative
A group of lines of verse (usually not less than four), arranged according to a
definite scheme which regulates the number of lines, the metre, and (in
rhymed poetry) the sequence of rhymes.
Emphasis given to a syllable in pitch, volume or duration (or several of these).
In normal spoken English some syllables are given greater stress than others.
A verb’s subject is normally the noun or pronoun which names the ‘do-er’ or
‘be-er’. Unlike the verb’s object and complement, the subject normally stands
just before it and decides whether or not a present-tense verb takes a suffix s.
In a question, the subject follows the verb.
E.g.
The children will follow the nature trail.
Usha’s mother went out.
Will the children follow?
Whether it’s going to rain is uncertain.
A visit has [not: have] been arranged.
The subjunctive form of a verb is occasionally used in very formal contexts to
indicate unreality, uncertainty, wish, emotion, judgement, or necessity. Its
inflection is complicated, because it does not always differ from nonsubjunctive forms. It has a distinguishable form in the
following cases:
 the third person singular of any verb in the present
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
tense does not have its usual –s ending
 the verb be in the present tense is always “be” (not
“am”, “are” or “is”)
 the verb be in the past tense is always “were” (not
“was”)
 the negatives of verbs in the present are formed
differently
 some modal verbs have a different form.
Subordination
E.g.
I insist that he come to visit every week. (He doesn’t actually come to visit, but
I would like him to).
(Compare: I insist that he comes to visit every week. [I am insisting that it’s
actually the case that he does visit, not simply that I would like him to.])
The school requires that all pupils be honest. (It’s possible for pupils not to be
honest, but the school would like them to be.)
If she were the President, things would be much better. (But she isn’t the
President.)
Father demanded that we not go to the forest.
I wish you would stop! (not “will stop”)
The use of main and subordinate clauses within a sentence e.g.
Unless you save up, you will not have the money to go on holiday.
(subordinate clause)
(main clause)
Subordinate
Clause
Subordination
The old man, who had fought in the war, showed off his medals
(subordinate clause)
A subordinate clause is subordinate to some word outside itself: it may modify
this word (e.g. as a relative clause or as an adverbial), or it may be used as a
verb’s subject or object. How a subordinate clause fits into the larger sentence
is normally marked grammatically, either by a special introductory word such
as a conjunction, or by special non-finite forms of the verb.
However:
 some subordinate clauses have no marking.
 clauses that are directly quoted as ‘direct speech’ are not subordinate
clauses.
E.g.
The centre has extensive grounds in which a nature trail has been designed.
He watched her as she disappeared in the fog at the bottom of the street.
A visit has been arranged for the Year 6 class, leaving school at 9.30am.
Usha went upstairs to play on her computer.
She saw an hour had passed (this subordinate clause has no marking)
Most words in a sentence are linked in the unequal relation of subordination
(rather than the equality of coordination). For example, a modifier is
subordinate to the word it modifies, and a verb’s subject, object and
complement are all subordinate to the verb. In each case, the subordinate
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
word makes the other word’s meaning more precise. See also subordinate
clause.
Suffix
E.g.
A big car swept past. (big is subordinate to car; car and past are subordinate
to swept)
A morpheme which is added to the end of a root word to change the tense…
e.g.
walk → walking talk → talked
grammatical status of the word… e.g.
habit → habitable
work → worker
Syllable
Synonym
Syntax
Tenses
singular to plural… e.g.
bus → buses
sock → socks
The smallest unit of speech that normally occurs in isolation, or a distinct sound
element within a word. This can consist of a vowel alone (e.g. O) or a
combination of a vowel and one or more consonants e.g. no, not
Monosyllables contain only one syllable e.g. dog, big, shoe
Polysyllables contain more than one syllable
e.g. today → to day
another → a no ther
Words which have the same meaning as another word, or very similar:
wet/damp. Avoids overuse of any word; adds variety
The study of sentence structure, i.e. how words are used together in a
sentence.
Past, present and future tense:
Verb
To be
To do
To go
To say
To tell
Past Tense
I was
You were
I did
She did
I went
We went
I said
He said
I told
You told
Present Tense
I am
You are
I do
She does
I go
We go
I say
He says
I tell
You tell
Future Tense
I will be
You will be
I will do
She Will do
I will go
We will go
I will say
He will say
I will tell
You will tell
Note: English has no specific future tense. Future time can be expressed in a
number of ways using will or present tenses.
E.g.
John will arrive tomorrow.
John will be arriving tomorrow.
John is going to arrive tomorrow.
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
John is arriving tomorrow.
John arrives tomorrow.
Tense inflection
Third Person
Trigraph
Verb
The ending of a verb which denotes its tense
e.g. –ed, -ing
(see suffix)
Narrative told from the point of view of an observer to the action by using
‘he’, ‘she’, ‘they’ and characters names.
three letters representing one phoneme: high; fudge
Word/group of words which names an action or state of being. Verbs may be
in different tenses: past - I ate, I have eaten
present - I am eating, I eat, I do eat
future - I will eat, I will be eating
Verbs can be expressed in the first person (I eat), the second person (you eat)
or third person (she, he, it eats).
Verbs can be active or passive:
active - the dog bit Ben.
passive - Ben was bitten by the dog.
auxiliary verb - a verb which chnages the voice or mood of another verb in a
verb phrase. They are: to be, to have, to do, can, could, may, might, must,
ought, shall, will, would, to need, to dare, and used. An auxiliary verb indicates
things that might happen: can/may, etc. or tell us that things happen or
happened: have/did/was. The auxiliary verb takes a participle or infinitve to
make a verb phrase: We might go home later; we have been eating more fresh
fruit.
Verb phrase
Vowel
Word
Two or more words that express an action or state of being. e.g.
I am going to the cinema.
He might win the competition.
I have been to school.
a, e, I, o and u
A phoneme produced without audible friction or closure. Every syllable
contains a vowel. A vowel phoneme may be represented by one or more
letters. These may be vowels (maid, or a combination of vowels and
consonants (start; could).
A word is a unit of grammar that can be selected and moved around relatively
independently of other such units. In punctuation, words are normally
Sarah Williams – SIO Primary English, Liverpool LA
separated by word spaces. But there are challenging complexities:
 When word-divisions are unclear we may be able to show this uncertainty
by using hyphens.
 apostrophes for omitted letters show where two words are treated as one.
E.g.
headteacher or head teacher (can be written with or without a space)
primary-school teacher (normally written with a hyphen)
English teacher (written with a space)
I’m going out…
…at 9.30am.
The time was 8.10pm.
Word Class
The main word classes are verb, noun, adjective, adverb, pronoun,
determiner, preposition and conjunction. These are all dealt with separately
in this glossary.
Note that a word can belong to more than one class. For example:
Word Family
Play - verb (I play) or noun (a play)
fit - noun (a fit), verb (they fit) or adjective (I’m fit)
until - preposition (until Monday) or conjunction (until I come back)
like - verb (I like) or preposition (do it like this)
hard - adjective (it’s hard work) or adverb (I work hard)
that - determiner (that book) or pronoun (who did that?) or conjunction (he
said that he …)
The words in a word family are normally related to each other by a
combination of form, grammar and meaning.
E.g.
teacher – teach
extensive – extend – extent
extensive – extend – extent
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